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CreosoteXmp37's Replies
Forty one ( US ) dollars.
Salient statement of the thread.
"<i>It's bad news. Without physical copies they can just erase Netflix originals from existence whenever they want (not that that is a big loss with many of them).</i>"
Yes. They can also erase from existence any other non-original content ( movies/TV ) whenever they want. Oh sure, when you go to watch something previously available, even if it was on your "my list", and now it's unavailable, you'll get the "opportunity" to watch it on some other play platform.
Streaming sucks.
About a 2 minute walk to the school property itself, then another few minutes to cut through the athletic fields and enter the school through the rear doors.
If I drew a straight line from my home to the closest part of the school building, it would come out to 500 or 600 feet.
I have a mild to moderate dislike for the term, though I do agree that context and delivery tone play a part.
I see it similar to when somebody uses the pronoun "you people" when speaking to somebody.
Misfits has an album called 'Project 1950' of covers of doo-wop 50s songs played at 90 miles and hour and rock as hard as a cement pie in the face.
Fun stuff.
Worst: Rear Window ( 1998 ) BAD as a remake, bad as a film on its own
Best: 12 Angry Men ( 1997 ) Pretty good as a remake, would be a good film on its own ( assuming it wasn't a remake )
Country
Disco
Rap
Soft Rock/Corporate Rock
+1. You beat me to it.
Among the behaviors exhibited, usually in order, are raising voices/attempts at intimidation, personal insults, moving the goalposts.
The salient fact is that, and what I'll say is basically, "If I have to be afraid of you for your argument to work...then you don't have a good argument".
Salad dressing with mayonnaise in it.
Clerks: Cinematic masterpiece. OK, maybe not that, but I REALLY like it.
Clerks II: Before I saw it I didn't think I'd like it ( I'm kind of prejudicial against sequellery ) but it turns out I like it a lot as well. Stands up on its own or as a companion to the first Clerks.
Haven't yet seen Clerks III but now I think I will.
All of those listed except eggs and yogurt. I don't eat very much oatmeal at all, though it's more due to time constraints than anything else. I eat salad a lot but do not like raw spinach at all: looks like something I'd spray Round Up on if I saw it in my yard. I like it sauteed though. Go figure.
Province of Messina, in a small mountain village not far from Taormina.
I was near Marsala a few weeks ago on vacation. Small world.
Walked. Entered school from the rear doors by the playing field after a less than 5 minute walk.
Father's side: Italy ( Sicily )
Mother's side: Sweden, Russia
Late 70s to early 80s.
My personal favorites were the "BOP" ( Buick, Olds, Pontiac ) A-bodies ( intermediate ), particularly the years 1968-1972. These would be the Buick GS, Olds 442, and Pontiac GTO. There were also A-body junior muscle cars as well: like them too.
These days though, I like all the old muscle. Like the modern muscle as well.
'Sexy Beast' ( 2000 ) Gritty crime/heist/psychological thriller with Ray Winstone. Ben Kingsley and Ian McShane play menacing menacing gangsters.
KISS - Beth
Led Zeppelin - All of my Love
It's not a matter of cable vs hydraulic. Yes there are some aircraft that use cables/rods to directly operate flight controls, but cables and rods are still employed on aircraft with hydraulic flight controls. The manual inputs via cables and/or rods act on hydraulic selectors or modules to port fluid pressure to a particular control surface actuator. Cables are often employed as back-up controls for redundancy as well.
"Fly by wire" aircraft are a different matter, but with them hydraulic power still does the heavy lifting ( so to speak ) of moving a control surface. The "by wire" is just a command to a hydraulic servo, and even these aircraft employ a limited number of cables for back-up control of certain key systems.
Many planes today still employ the use of cables and rods, it's just that they aren't visible to the passenger.